Top stories in higher ed for Friday
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| Lumina Foundation is committed to increasing the proportion of Americans with high-quality degrees, certificates and other credentials to 60 percent by 2025. |
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The Big Shift in Education and Work Elyse Ashburn and Paul Fain, Work Shift SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Call it the “great reassessment of work,” the “great resignation,” or the “big churn.” Whatever the case, today’s job market is facing massive upheaval amid growing evidence that millions of Americans are rethinking what they want from work. There’s a shift underway—and whether it ends up being seismic or something smaller, it has major implications for the way we educate and prepare people for careers. |
Photo: Getty ImagesThe Other Freshman Class Beckie Supiano, The Chronicle of Higher Education SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Freshman year is about figuring out who and what you like. Students begin pinpointing their interests, academically and otherwise, and determining how to pursue them. To facilitate this, colleges offer first-year students an abundance of people to meet and new things to try—and push them to take advantage of that at every turn. This year’s rising sophomores—even those like Wyatt Ashton who technically spent a year living and learning on campus—didn’t have access to the full abundance. And they didn’t get that push. As a result, colleges will in many ways have two cohorts of first-year students this fall. |
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Photo: Wayne D’OrioOpinion: Prison Learning Must Be High Quality and Lead to a Degree Catharine Bond Hill and Meagan Wilson, The Hechinger Report SHARE: Facebook • Twitter With the restoration of Pell Grants to incarcerated students, the expectation is that the number of higher education programs will grow, benefiting students, their families and communities, as well as departments of correction, as such programs improve prison environments. These benefits will only be realized, however, if the programs offered are quality programs that lead to student learning, credits, and degrees, write Catharine Bond Hill and Meagan Wilson of Ithaka S+R in this op-ed. |
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| A New Generation of DACA Youth Depends on Biden for Support Daisy Contreras, PRI SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Karla Mercado was 11 years old in 2012 when she saw President Barack Obama on TV announce the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program. Mercado is 19 now and a college student in Virginia. She is a newcomer to DACA—or at least she hopes to be. Mercado is also part of a new generation of undocumented people who qualified for DACA during the Trump administration, which fought against the program. Now, they're relying on President Joe Biden to secure their future. |
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‘Our Generation Is Bold’: Students Reflect on a Pandemic Year, Interviewing Secretary Cardona Colleen Connolly, Chalkbeat SHARE: Facebook • Twitter After a year upended by the pandemic, six high school graduates from around the United States spoke to Education Secretary Miguel Cardona about their hopes for the future of education. On their minds were issues like the digital divide, racial justice, and the challenges facing undocumented students. From Brownsville, Tennessee, to the Bronx in New York City, they offered Cardona a window into their lives as students. They also challenged him about the ways schools are falling short in their communities—and possible solutions for change. |
Even as the Pandemic Recedes, Students Might Not Return to Campus Kevin Richert, Idaho EdNews SHARE: Facebook • Twitter During the pandemic, Idaho colleges and universities have struggled to recruit students from several key demographics: in-state students, rural students, students from low-income households, and students of color. Vaccines could help Idaho’s college campuses move past the pandemic. More face-to-face classes, fewer Zoom sessions. More events and activities, fewer health protocols. More predictability, less uncertainty. But even if campuses return to normal this fall, that doesn’t mean students will return to campus. |
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RACIAL JUSTICE AND EQUITY |
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